Friday, October 4, 2013

WWII Memorial Barricade Wired Shut


JOHN MCCORMACK
The Weekly Standard
October 4, 2013


On Tuesday morning, seven National Park Service employees were seen erecting and tending to a barricade around the World War II memorial in Washington, D.C. One NPS employee was operating a forklift. There usually aren’t any NPS employees working at the World War II memorial.


A couple hours later, when an Honor Flight of World War II veterans arrived, accompanied by Democratic and Republican members of Congress, the fences blocking the memorial were easily moved away, allowing the veterans to enter.


But the barriers are still at the memorial, and they’ve been reinforced. This morning, I walked by the memorial and noticed that wires had been used to tie the fences together:


Meanwhile, the barricade in front of a memorial to World War I veterans a couple blocks away still looks like this:


Who is ordering the National Park Service to go to such great lengths to shut down the open-air World War II memorial that is usually unguarded? On Tuesday, Carol Johnson of the National Park Service told me that the White House’s Office of Management and Budget “sends everything down to all other departments. We are part of the Interior. Interior gives us our instructions.”


This article was posted: Friday, October 4, 2013 at 9:58 am









Prison Planet.com



WWII Memorial Barricade Wired Shut

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